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  • There is really only one question you ever need to direct at someone to work out whether

  • or not they are a good person - and that is, with deliberate simplicity: Do you think you

  • are a good person? And to this there is only one acceptable answer. People who are genuinely

  • good, people who know about kindness, patience, forgiveness, compromise, apology and gentleness

  • always, always answer no.

  • One cannot both be a good person and at the same time feel either blameless or pure inside.

  • Goodness is, one might say, the unique consequence of a keen and ongoing awareness of one's

  • capacity to be bad, that is, to be thoughtless, cruel, self-righteous and deaf to the legitimate

  • needs of others. Only on the basis of a perpetual vigilant impression that one hasn't got

  • the right to judge oneself above suspicion, does one come anywhere near the ethical high

  • standard that merits the title of 'good' (a word one can still never use of oneself).

  • The price of being genuinely good has to be a constant suspicion that one might be a monster

  • - combined with a fundamental hesitation about labelling anyone else monstrous. A guilty

  • conscience is the bedrock of virtue.

  • Correspondingly, only properly bad people don't lie awake at night worrying about

  • their characters. It has generally never occurred to the most difficult or dangerous people

  • on the planet that they might be lacking. Their sickness is to locate evil always firmly

  • outside of themselves: it's by definition invariably the others who are to blame, the

  • others who are cruel, sinful, lacking in judgement and mistaken. And their job is to take these

  • impure people down and correct their evils in the fire of their own righteousness.

  • It is a grim paradox that the worst deeds that humans have ever been guilty of have

  • been carried out by people with an easy conscience, people who felt they were definitely on the

  • side of angels, people who were entirely sure that they had justice in hand. What unites

  • the people who report their neighbours to the secret police, the crowds who burn their

  • victims at stakes while dancing around their agonised bodies, the government officials

  • who set up purification camps and the nations that wipe out their enemies with special barbarism

  • is their consistent and overwhelming sense that they are doing the right thing - in the

  • eyes of god, history or Truth. When trying to understand why people do evil things, never

  • start from the position of imagining that they understood them as evil; remember that

  • they would have carried out their nastiness cocksure that they were paragons. An impassioned

  • feeling of being the instrument of justice has been at the heart of humanity's most

  • appallingly unkind moments.

  • It is a hallmark of all the cruellest ages of history that certain groups decide that

  • they have landed on a cause that gives them a monopoly on justice: that a particular god

  • has given them a special mission to eradicate sin or when their study of economics or biology

  • have shown them one true path to an upright future - at which point there is no limit

  • to the number of eggs that can be broken to concoct the righteous omelette. And by implication,

  • the kindest stretches of history are those when a majority daily awake wondering how

  • they might go easy on others because they are so flawed themselves, when a sense of

  • scepticism and apology dominates every social exchange, when one is constantly charitable

  • in word and deed from a sense of impeachability - and when people can always readily forgive

  • because they know how much in them needs to be forgiven.

  • "Who am I?" is a book designed to help us create a psychological portrait of who we are; with the use of some unusual, oblique, entertaining and playful prompts.

There is really only one question you ever need to direct at someone to work out whether

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